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What super-busy actor Andy Nyman did next

Hot on the heels of writing a hit novel, the super-busy actor is heading to the West End for a musical role – starring opposite Imelda Staunton

June 20, 2024 15:51
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Screen hit: Nyman as James Marcham in TV series Wanderlust
6 min read

Ninety per cent of actors are out of work 90 per cent of the time. A fact confirmed by a recent study by Queen Mary University of London that surveyed more than two million actors. They found only 2 per cent make a living. Note the “make a living” part, we’re not even talking about becoming the next Bradley Cooper or Margot Robbie. So, this makes Andy Nyman a member of a very elite group of people. Trust me, I’ve never met a busier actor.

Whether it’s working with Renée Zellweger in the biopic Judy, starring on Broadway in Hangmen, writing (with Jeremy Dyson) the play and film Ghost Stories, featuring in major TV series such as Unforgotten and Wanderlust or, again with Dyson, writing a bestselling novel, The Warlock Effect, just out in paperback, which ignited a seven-way bidding war for TV rights, he’s an in-demand actor. Nyman is also a member of the Magic Circle and is responsible for co-creating and writing many of Derren Brown’s stage and TV shows. Now he’s stepping out in the West End at the London Palladium as Horace Vandergelder, the curmudgeonly half millionaire in Hello, Dolly! with the indomitable Imelda Staunton as Dolly, the matchmaker looking to make a match for herself.

Nyman in rehearsal for Hello, Dolly![Missing Credit]

“It is the biggest cast I’ve ever been in, I think there’s 40 cast members. Plus, it’s going to be the biggest orchestra in the West End, I think it’s 26-piece. The design is breathtaking as well, it’s going to be absolutely remarkable,” Nyman tells me when we meet at rehearsals.

“Because of the film with Barbra Streisand and Walter Matthau, people seem to think it’s a Jewish story. It’s not. It’s about people who are lonely. Streisand and Matthau are giants, but I have no preconceptions other than looking at the script, and looking at the Thornton Wilder play, The Merchant of Yonkers, that it’s based on. I haven’t seen the film since I was a kid. I did take my mum to see Bette Midler in it in New York in 2018 and that was special.”